This gives me bad flashbacks to Salesforce's GovCloud implementation (likely mandated here for Slack), which is a steaming nightmare mess of never-quite-consistently-working disjointed CI servers (multiple per project), manual deployment processes requiring 48-hour lead times for submitting requests for approvals to deploy (with boilerplate paperwork manually filled out about the artifact being deployed and the timeline of the staggered deploy), and mandatory multi-day staggered deployments with no automatic rollback, where all deployment steps were required to be performed (again, manually) outside of US business hours (no deploys between 8am eastern and 6pm eastern will be approved, even for emergency fixes).
I fled from overworked stress-panic when that nightmare was forced on me because Salesforce decided to double my acquisition's workload by reorg'ing out 70% of our engineering staff (while requiring the remaining 30% to pick up and maintain — and in some cases, bring into compliance — the ownership areas previously belonging to that other 70%).
Not a day has gone by that I've regretted it. Every night that I can sleep well instead of being kept awake by Salesforce-induced stress is a night I'm glad to have back from them.
This is fascinating to read, but the thing that kept me going through was the art from Glitch. What nostalgia those images brought! It's a shame that none of the projects to revive the game from the open sourced assets really took off. I wish Tiny Speck had offered a way to subscribe to the game so that it covered their operating expenses. It was really remarkable.
Only US citizens are permitted to deploy code to the US government production servers, or look at the telemetry from those servers.
(I'm a UK citizen, based in the UK, and I have local colleagues supporting products that are deployed to both commercial .com, and US .gov domains. They deploy to .com themselves, but another team based in the US deploy to .gov)
Can you please stop posting unsubstantive and/or flamebait comments? You've been doing it repeatedly, unfortunately, and we eventually have to ban such accounts.
I fled from overworked stress-panic when that nightmare was forced on me because Salesforce decided to double my acquisition's workload by reorg'ing out 70% of our engineering staff (while requiring the remaining 30% to pick up and maintain — and in some cases, bring into compliance — the ownership areas previously belonging to that other 70%).
Not a day has gone by that I've regretted it. Every night that I can sleep well instead of being kept awake by Salesforce-induced stress is a night I'm glad to have back from them.